Kremlin says ready to meet as many times as need to reach peace settlement

Moscow: Russia is ready to meet with the US as many times as will be necessary to reach a solution for the Ukraine war, the Kremlin said Wednesday after negotiations between Vladimir Putin and US officials ended with no breakthrough.
Putin held hours of late-night talks with Donald Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff and son-in-law Jared Kushner Tuesday, but neither side announced headway on a peace settlement to end almost four years of war in Ukraine.
“We are grateful for the efforts of (US President Donald) Trump’s administration and we are still ready to meet as many times as is needed to reach a peace settlement,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.
Witkoff and Kushner went to Moscow with an updated version of a US plan to end the conflict, after talks between Washington and Kyiv.
Peskov said that the Russian side had voiced what was “unacceptable” to them.
“This is a normal process,” Peskov said, adding: “It was the first time there was a direct exchange of opinions.”
He said Moscow was expecting the US to also be tight-lipped on the process for progress to be made.
The meeting is a crucial moment for Ukraine in what could be a fraught week following days of frantic diplomacy. At the heart of it is a US plan to bring peace, which has since been revised under pressure from Kyiv and its European backers.
On occupied Ukrainian territories, “so far we haven’t found a compromise, but some American solutions can be discussed,” top Russian presidential aide Yuri Ushakov said after the Moscow meeting.
“Some proposed formulations do not fit us, and work will continue,” he added.
Trump said progress on ending the nearly four-year-long war would not be easy.
“Our people are over in Russia right now to see if we can get it settled,” he said during a cabinet meeting at the White House.
“Not an easy situation, let me tell you. What a mess.”
In an interview broadcast Tuesday night on Fox News, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said talks with Russia “have made some progress” to end the war with Ukraine. It was not clear exactly when the interview had been recorded.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Monday that any plan must end the war for good, and not just lead to a pause in the fighting that began with Moscow’s offensive in February 2022.
He also said in a social media post that “there will be no simple solutions”.
“What matters is that everything is fair and transparent. That there are no games played behind Ukraine’s back. That nothing is decided without Ukraine - about us, about our future,” he said.
Kushner and Witkoff were to present Putin with the new version of the US plan, which has been hammered out after the initial version raised fears in Kyiv and elsewhere in Europe that it made too many concessions to Moscow.
Ushakov said the initial US plan was broken down into four parts, which were discussed during the five-hour meeting in the Kremlin.
“There were some points we could agree on,” the top Putin diplomatic aide said, but “the president did not hide our critical, even negative, stance on a number of proposals”.
Putin has demanded that Kyiv surrender territory Moscow claims as its own. The Kremlin also rejects any European force in Ukraine to monitor a truce.
In his social media post, Zelensky said “the most difficult questions are about territories, about frozen (Russian) assets... And about security guarantees.”
Still, the talks in Moscow were “useful”, Ushakov said, and Russia and US positions did not become farther apart after it.
Putin appeared to send a hawkish message shortly before the US talks began.
He said that Pokrovsk - an east Ukrainian stronghold that Russian forces say they recently captured - was a “good foothold for solving all the tasks set at the beginning of the special military operation”, using the Kremlin’s term for the war.
Apart from Pokrovsk, Kyiv is under pressure on several fronts.
Russian forces advanced swiftly in November in eastern Ukraine, and Kyiv has been rocked by corruption scandals that ended with the resignation of its top negotiator on the conflict - Zelensky’s right-hand man.
Moscow has also stepped up drone and missile attacks on Ukraine in recent weeks, leaving hundreds of thousands without electricity and heating, with Zelensky accusing the Kremlin of trying to “break” his country.
The Russian leader also accused Europe of sabotaging a deal on the conflict and sent a grim message, saying: “We are not planning to go to war with Europe, but if Europe wants to and starts, we are ready right now.”
Zelensky has said he expects to discuss key issues with the US president and suggested Moscow’s real motivation for the US talks was to ease Western sanctions.
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